International Journal of Internet Science

Author's Instructions: Format

Manuscripts that are to be published in the International Journal of Internet Science (IJIS) need to be formatted according to the Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association (APA Style Guide, 6th edition, at least 2nd print).
This implies, among other issues, that you put the author(s)' name(s) and institutional affiliation(s) on the title page
only, so the direct author information can be detached easily. The page with author(s)' name(s) should not include the abstract.
On the next page, the title and abstract should appear without any author names.
Please submit your manuscript below as a PDF, Open Office or MS Word file.

Process

Submitted manuscripts will be desk reviewed. If considered potentially appropriate for publication in the International Journal of Internet Science, a manuscript will then be sent out to at least two (often three) reviewers and is subject to double blind peer review (in rare cases with good reasons just blind peer review).

To submit a manuscript fill out the form below. You will be notified immediately via e-mail if your submission was received.
Please be patient when uploading your manuscript. Wait until you see "Thank you for your submission" below.

If you do not see an upload form, please reload the page or submit you manuscript by e-mail (delete the word "NOSPAM" from the e-mail address)!

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Hosted and supported by:
University of Konstanz
Supported by:
Eindhoven University of Technology,
Social Science Information Centre,
ZPID

Regular Issues

Acceptance for submission for IJIS is open. Please submit your manuscript below. We prefer submissions as MS Word files. However, we also accept PDF, Open Office, and Apple Pages files.

You may also send a notfication of intended submission via e-mail to us (delete the word "NOSPAM" from the e-mail address).

Scope

The International Journal of Internet Science is an interdisciplinary, peer reviewed journal for the publication of research articles about empirical findings, methodology, and theory in the field of Internet Science. It provides an outlet for articles on the Internet as a medium of research and its implications for individuals, social groups, organizations, and society. Typical articles report empirical results gathered to test and advance theories in the social and behavioral sciences.